This lecture focuses on Chapter 9: The Dharma Door of Nonduality, one of the climactic teachings of the text.
Here is a summary of the key points:
🌿 Context and Background
- The lecture is the sixth in a series on The Vimalakīrti Nirdeśa, a short but extraordinarily rich Mahāyāna scripture, filled with doctrinal exposition, poetry, humor, biography, and magical elements.
- The Sutra emphasizes the profound, paradoxical, and often poetic way in which truth is conveyed in the Mahāyāna.
🪑 Opening Anecdote: Sariputra and the Chair
- Vimalakīrti confronts Sariputra, who is worrying about seating arrangements instead of focusing on the Dharma.
- Vimalakīrti asks: “Did you come here for the sake of the Dharma or for the sake of a chair?”
- This humorous incident illustrates how easily we are distracted—a metaphor for how we get sidetracked in spiritual practice.
✨ Magical Displays and Teachings
- Vimalakīrti conjures 3.2 million thrones from another Buddha land to accommodate the assembly—symbolizing the inconceivable nature of liberative power.
- The teaching of “Inconceivable Liberation” points to freedom from conventional space and time.
🌸 The Goddess and Sariputra’s Discomfort
- A goddess showers flowers on the assembly; they don’t stick to Bodhisattvas but do to Arahats like Sariputra—symbolizing clinging to form or rigidity.
- Sariputra undergoes a magical gender transformation—again highlighting the fluidity of form and the challenge to fixed identity.
🧭 Paradoxical Teachings on the Tathāgata’s ‘Family’
- Vimalakīrti explains the Bodhisattva’s “family” using metaphor:
- Wisdom = mother, Skillful means = father,
- Joy = wife, Compassion and Love = daughters, etc.
- This poetic vision reimagines the spiritual life as a rich, symbolic ecosystem.
🌀 The Main Theme: The Way of Nonduality
- Thirty-one Bodhisattvas answer the question:
“How do Bodhisattvas enter the Dharma Door of Nonduality?” - Each Bodhisattva presents a pair of dualities—self/other, attention/distraction, sin/sinlessness—and demonstrates how the transcendence of the duality itself is the path.
Examples:
- Distraction and Attention
→ Integration (understanding inner causes of distraction) is the entry into nonduality. - Bodhisattva vs. Disciple Mind
→ Seeing both as constructs of the same illusionary mind (maya-citta). - Sinfulness and Sinlessness
→ Not being bound by group approval or disapproval; cultivating transcendental individuality. - Buddha, Dharma, and Sangha
→ Realising all three are expressions of the unconditioned.
🔇 The Climax: Vimalakīrti’s Thunderous Silence
- After all replies, Manjusri critiques them as still dualistic—since they are conceptual.
- He concludes: to express nothing is the entrance into nonduality.
- Vimalakīrti’s response is silence—a silence of realization, not conceptual negation.
🪟 What is a ‘Dharma Door’?
- “Dharma Door” (dharmamukha) means entryway into reality.
- A teaching (conceptual) can be a door to the truth (nonconceptual)—but only if not mistaken for the truth itself.
🧭 The Core Insight
- We must use dualistic teachings and experiences to go beyond dualism.
- Nonduality is not a state we can grasp—but a transformation in how we relate to opposites.
🧩 Alternative, Everyday Nondualities
Sangharakshita offers modern analogues:
- Masculine and feminine are two; individuality is the entrance into nonduality.
- Teacher and taught are two; communication is the entrance.
- God and man are two; blasphemy is the entrance (provocative, to challenge fixed notions).
📌 Final Reflection
- The Way of Nonduality is not the erasure of distinctions but a radical re-seeing:
using concepts to go beyond concepts, using silence to transcend both speech and silence. - Vimalakīrti’s method is playful, paradoxical, and profound.